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Just4Jewels
is the fourth studio album by American hip hop duo Run the Jewels. It was released digitally through their own Jewel Runners imprint via BMG Rights Management on June 3, 2020, two days earlier than scheduled, with physical editions released in September 2020. As with their previous albums, a download of the album is available for free through their website, with the option of paying for it via other digital providers. The album features guest appearances from Greg Nice, DJ Premier, 2 Chainz, Pharrell Williams, Mavis Staples, Josh Homme, and frequent collaborator Zack de la Rocha.
RTJ4 - Wikipedia
RTJ4 received widespread acclaim from critics and debuted at number 10 on the US Billboard 200, their first top 10 album on the chart. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from professional publications, the album received an average score of 89, based on 26 reviews. The album was supported by three singles: "Yankee and the Brave (Ep. The album was first announced on October 11, 2018, with the release of the non-album single "Let's Go (The Royal We)", which was featured in the 2018 superhero film Venom and debuted on Zane Lowe's Beats 1 show. Due to the ongoing protests against police brutality sparked by the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery, the duo decided to release it two days early. The world is infested with bullshit so here's something raw to listen to while you deal with it all. Stay safe and hopeful out there and thank you for giving 2 friends the chance to be heard and do what they love. Will Lavin of NME praised the album, stating, "Easily Mike and El-P's best work to date, RTJ4 is protest music for a new generation; they're armed in the uprising with a torrent of spirited rallying calls." Reviewing the album for Rolling Stone, Jon Dolan stated, "RTJ4, which the band rush-released a few days ahead of schedule, is laser-focused. [...] Mike unloads on racist cops, systemic poverty, corporate media, and other eternal enemies.

But the album never feels preachy, because the music bounces as much as it brays, with an elastic flow and deep history." Jack Bray of The Line of Best Fit wrote, "RTJ4 is Killer Mike & El-P's masterstroke. This is musical evolution for moral, social and political revolution, the group now creating anthems in the pursuit of tolerance, respect and unity." Channing Freeman from Sputnikmusic also enjoyed the album, saying, "As is typical on Run the Jewels albums, every feature is perfectly placed, but the inclusion of Mavis Staples and Josh Homme may be El-P's finest production moment yet. Homme's ghostly wailing and questing guitar provide a backdrop for Staples to sing an image that perfectly distills not only RTJ's oeuvre but the bloody centuries of America's history." For Pitchfork, Sheldon Pearce wrote that "RTJ4 centers protest music less explicitly than RTJ3 did, but the moments when the album is most pronouncedly in active revolt are still when it feels most essential". Yeung of All Music gave a positive review, stating, "RTJ4 distills the anger and frustration of the people through Run the Jewels' hard-hitting, no-nonsense revolution anthems.
Trim with no filler, this fourth set from the outspoken duo provides relevant history lessons that are more useful than a classroom textbook." Exclaim! critic Kyle Mullin said of El-P, "The New York rapper-producer's greatest contribution to RTJ4 is his vivid and varied sonic backdrops. His on-point production offers the lyrically superior Killer Mike both space and sonic support as he rises to new heights of artistry and activism, making El-P the kind of ally worth emulating." Mike Milenko of Clash said, "RTJ4 is a must listen. It is diverse enough to appeal to even the hardest crowds. Many genres are represented here, but lyrical hip-hop is at the forefront of all that Run the Jewels is.
Run The Jewels - RTJ4 Lyrics - Full Album - Lyrics On Demand
They stand out from the crowd, whilst invoking the people to stand up for themselves. There is not a bad song on the entire album and the production and features are second to none." In his Substack-published "Consumer Guide" column, Robert Christgau assigned the album an 'A ' grade and applauded the "vigor" of the duo's political direction and the lyrics as their "sharpest" yet, while declaring, "With trap on its opiated treadmill, the gangsta sonics that power El-P and Killer Mike's inchoate aggressiveness will feel tonic to anyone with both an appetite for music and a political pulse." RTJ4 debuted at number 10 on the US Billboard 200 with 38,000 album-equivalent units (including 30,000 pure album sales) from just two days of tracking, marking the duo's first top 10 album on the chart. It’s been nine years since Safeway first started testing its “Just for U” digital discount program, five years since Safeway was acquired by Albertsons, and three years since Albertsons began expanding the program to its own stores.
Now, finally, Just for U has become the digital coupon and personalized pricing program across all major grocery chains owned by Albertsons. So remember a few years ago when Albertsons dropped its multi-tier pricing programs and said “all customers deserve the same price on all items”? Effective today, Chicago-based Jewel-Osco has become the latest, and last, to make the switch from the My Mixx digital coupon program to Just for U – just a little behind schedule. Albertsons began introducing Just for U to its flagship stores a few years ago.

And last May, the company said it was “in the process of rolling out Just for U across the nation”, with plans to complete the process “by September”. Shaw’s and Star Market made the move that summer, but ACME didn’t adopt Just for U until November, and now Jewel will finally join them.
Now, with the exception of smaller, regional Albertsons-owned chains like Haggen, Lucky and United Supermarkets, which run their own discount programs, the planned nationwide rollout of Just for U is complete. Many Jewel shoppers with long memories are already familiar with Just for U, since it was offered by Safeway-owned Dominick’s before Safeway shut down that Chicago-area chain back in 2013. Just for U offers a large selection of digital coupons, as most other grocery discount programs do these days.
Just In – Jewels by Grace
But its defining feature is the personalized discounts and offers that are, well, “just for you”. Unlike other grocery discount programs that collect information about you and your shopping preferences but don’t seem to do a whole lot with it, Just for U offers deals based on your purchase history. So if you buy a lot of fresh food, you might get a store coupon offering a dollar off a produce purchase. Other offers aren’t coupons at all – they’re customized sale prices that you alone are offered. If you’ve frequently purchased anything from trash bags to salad dressing, a personalized price will show up in your Just for U account – $2.69 for dressing that regularly sells for $2.99, for example, or $6.07 for a box of trash bags that normally sell for $7.49. Your fellow shoppers who aren’t offered these deals will pay regular price and be none the wiser. That’s a distinct improvement over traditional grocery loyalty programs, which effectively offer the same discounts to just about everyone.
When grocery loyalty programs were first introduced, the idea was to reward a store’s best, card-carrying customers with special deals. But once the vast majority of shoppers signed up after figuring out that you don’t get the deals if you don’t have a card, all that a traditional loyalty program serves to do these days is punish customers who don’t have a loyalty card by forcing them to pay full price instead of the advertised discounts.